All yhe saws ive seen from your channel seem to be great worksaws. Its good to see people build real world saws. Thank uou sir for the education upu are giving us all.
Some time ago I suggested on one of the forums that I would do a video and post it to help guys get started on this. You sir have done a far better job than anything I had in mind. I would have brushed over things in far less detail but had every intention of posting all the numbers etc to give guys a starting point as you have. I build a different saw with higher numbers typically that suit my use but in actual fact this saw is a better work saw for everyday use. It clearly runs strong with pretty decent cut speed. The other aspect I like is it shows just how much work goes into doing this and the collection of some pretty expensive tools it takes to do it. I expect you now have more work than ever for having effectively shown everyone how to do it themselves. Possibly the revers effect to what you may have thought. A great deal of that is the quality of the work is there for all to see. Well shaped ports with good tool control (it's much harder than it looks people). Well done Scott.
32:1.... I'm so glad to hear someone I can trust saying this!! It "sounds & feels right", but that doesn't make it so! I've gone from 50 down to 32, back to 50, eventually settled on 40:1 for ages (using 90-92oct, eth-free fuel, I buy&mix 1gal max and use&replace, always fresh!) However breaking-in a new saw, and seeing 25:1 on my g660's box, I didn't know what to do....had a 50:1 quart of Motomix I bought (1-time thing, for 1st tank only), added enough Red Armor to bring it to ~30:1 (so ~7.5mL), and was gonna use that....the g660 literature that comes w/ the powerhead says 50:1, 40:1, 32:1 and 25:1 depending where on the manual or package you read from! Also am going to rub-down, then rub-off, all my parts with marine-grease instead of oil (and do the rubbing with a wd40 rag!), might be redundant/overkill but figure to err towards anything that may help me (as I'm very n00b, not that you wouldn't be able to tell that :P )
I'd watch you all day especially when we was talking about spending over $700 on the Grinders that you use I bought a junkie one for 4:50 and I should just saved an extra $300 and bought a brand new one cuz it does.. I just left Wisconsin last month I was there for 4 months redoing the alarms on the Kroger stores over there I was in Milwaukee and just south of Milwaukee.. be nice to see more of you on video thank you sir hope you're feeling good doing better from the Michigan boy talk to you soon
All yhe saws ive seen from your channel seem to be great worksaws. Its good to see people build real world saws. Thank uou sir for the education upu are giving us all.
i watched the entire series. thanks very much sir
Love this series!!! Thanks for doing it, buddy!!!
Great series. Thank you!
Some time ago I suggested on one of the forums that I would do a video and post it to help guys get started on this. You sir have done a far better job than anything I had in mind. I would have brushed over things in far less detail but had every intention of posting all the numbers etc to give guys a starting point as you have. I build a different saw with higher numbers typically that suit my use but in actual fact this saw is a better work saw for everyday use. It clearly runs strong with pretty decent cut speed.
The other aspect I like is it shows just how much work goes into doing this and the collection of some pretty expensive tools it takes to do it. I expect you now have more work than ever for having effectively shown everyone how to do it themselves. Possibly the revers effect to what you may have thought. A great deal of that is the quality of the work is there for all to see. Well shaped ports with good tool control (it's much harder than it looks people). Well done Scott.
32:1.... I'm so glad to hear someone I can trust saying this!! It "sounds & feels right", but that doesn't make it so! I've gone from 50 down to 32, back to 50, eventually settled on 40:1 for ages (using 90-92oct, eth-free fuel, I buy&mix 1gal max and use&replace, always fresh!) However breaking-in a new saw, and seeing 25:1 on my g660's box, I didn't know what to do....had a 50:1 quart of Motomix I bought (1-time thing, for 1st tank only), added enough Red Armor to bring it to ~30:1 (so ~7.5mL), and was gonna use that....the g660 literature that comes w/ the powerhead says 50:1, 40:1, 32:1 and 25:1 depending where on the manual or package you read from!
Also am going to rub-down, then rub-off, all my parts with marine-grease instead of oil (and do the rubbing with a wd40 rag!), might be redundant/overkill but figure to err towards anything that may help me (as I'm very n00b, not that you wouldn't be able to tell that :P )
Im really diggin' your channel.
Glad I found this series, very informative. Thanks!
I'd watch you all day especially when we was talking about spending over $700 on the Grinders that you use I bought a junkie one for 4:50 and I should just saved an extra $300 and bought a brand new one cuz it does.. I just left Wisconsin last month I was there for 4 months redoing the alarms on the Kroger stores over there I was in Milwaukee and just south of Milwaukee.. be nice to see more of you on video thank you sir hope you're feeling good doing better from the Michigan boy talk to you soon
TY Scott well done big help maybe break some of my bad habits TY BIG TIME!
PLEASE DO ONE ON TIMING AND HOW TO!!!🙏🙏🙏
I agree. Ive always been curious about timing.
How do i purchase one of your saws?
Stihl waiting on my 🎄 🐒 certificate diploma...
it's in the mail
@@floydnglenn Thanks 😊
@@floydnglenn Hopefully my 2stroke decoder ring makes it too.
@@StumpShot it's in snail mail
@@floydnglenn poor 🐌